Post on 27-Jun-2020
Starting off Right: Investing in the Early Years
Shared Principles for Equitable and Excellent Basic Education Systems Conference
March 2017
Amanda E. DevercelliGlobal Lead for Early Childhood DevelopmentThe World Bank Group
What will we cover in the next 15 minutes?
• What is early childhood development (ECD)?
• Why should investments in ECD be a priority?
• Global evidence on returns to investments in ECE
• Engaging the private sector in early learning
• What are the latest innovations in the Bank’s work?
What is Early Childhood Development (ECD)?
ECD: The period before pregnancy, through transition to primary school
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Early childhood is a highly sensitive period for development
C. Nelson, in From Neurons to Neighborhoods, 2000
;
The importance of the first 1,000 days
CHILD WITH STUNTED BRAIN DEVELOPMENT HEALTHY, CARED FOR CHILD
We get more from integrating child nutrition and stimulation:Jamaica example
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Source: Grantham-McGregor et al., Lancet, 1997.
A follow up when beneficiary children reached age 22 found significant long term labor market returns (earnings 25% higher) in the group that had received early stimulation (with or without nutrition) compared to the group that had received nutrition only or no intervention at all (Gertler et al., 2014)
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Why should ECD be a priority for investment?
Improve education outcomes
Promote equity
Build a skilled workforce
Yield high returns and benefit society
Investments in early learning can:
Improve education outcomes
Reduce repetition and drop-out rates
Kids stay in school longer
Improve test scores
Look at what happens in the NEXT thousand days
Promote equity
Will these children be ready to meet expectations in Grade 1?
Build a skilled workforce
Human capital accumulation: the skills acquired during the years form the basis for future learning and success
Cognitive and socioemotional
Jamaica: 25% higher earnings in adulthood
Lifetime earning gains of $15-$34 billion if global preschool enrollment increased to 50% for children in low- and middle-income countries
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Yield high returns and benefit society
Every $1
invested in
ECD can
yield $6-17
USD
Heckman, 2006
International evidence on the returns to investments in ECD
Are we talking about ECD or ECE?
•Most longitudinal evidence is from high-intensity, small scale RCTs in high-income countries
•Many new studies from low- and middle-income countries show positive outcomes
•Implications for policymaking in low- and middle-income countries?
Poor quality ECE will not yield the benefits we seek
•South Africa
•Cambodia
•US Head Start
Findings from PISA
ECE is associated with significantly higher scores in reading and math at age 15
Score differences are biggest in lower-middle income countries
Unequal access: a child from a poor family is 3x less likely to be enrolled
Kids who were enrolled in ECE tend to have higher PISA math scores than kids who had no ECE
Source: Garcia, Devercelli and Valerio (forthcoming)
25.6***16.6***
82.6***
9.5***-4.7***
40.2***
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ECE>1 year ECE<1 year
Kids who were enrolled in ECE tend to have higher PISA reading scores than kids who had no ECE
Source: Garcia, Devercelli and Valerio (forthcoming)
34.5***
10.5***
66.7***
23.7***
-3.0*
34.6***
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ECE>1 year ECE<1 year
Read
Evidence on ECE and adult skills
STEP Survey of adults in 12 countries
ECE participation and adult outcomes
Additional Years of Schooling associated
with ECE participation
OLS PSM
Coef. Coef.
Armenia .39** .36**
Bolivia 1.29** 1.24**
Colombia .71** .82**
Georgia .50** .43**
Ghana 1.49** 1.83**
Kenya 1.01** .90**
Laos 1.37** 1.39**
Macedonia .59** .38**
Sri Lanka .33 .28
Ukraine .24** .31**
Vietnam 1.25** 1.04**
Yunnan (China) 1.60** 1.50**
Pooled .88** .90**Source: STEP, Ages 20-64.
Notes: * p<.10, ** p<.05.
Adults who attended ECE stay in school .2 to 1.8 years longer
Pooled figure is .9 years of additional schooling across countries
As adults, employed jobs that require more skills
What about the idea that children who participate in ECD have better socioemotional skills?
We think it’s true, but we don’t have conclusive evidence.• Limited number of robust longitudinal data sets•Measurement challenges
Public Private Partnerships (PPP)?
Engaging the non-state sector in early learning
Private preschool enrollment is growing around the worldIncrease in private preschool enrollment 2000-2013
Source: Edstats (2015)
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5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
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2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Private enrollment, millions of students Private enrollment as percentage of total enrolment
• Parental demand• Recognition of returns to investment• Recruitment strategies of low-cost private schools• Urban migration• Women’s labor force participation• Limited public sector capacity to serve all children with
high quality
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What is driving this growth?
• Private for-profit
• Low-cost private for-profit
• Community-based
• Home daycares
• Faith-based
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What is the non-state sector for ECD?
1. What are your early learning goals?
2. What can you afford to finance?
3. What can you/ do you want to implement?
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Three questions to begin dialogue at country level
Can working with the private sector help you achieve these goals at a lower cost and/or greater efficiency?
A quality assurance system and incentives for quality are key
• Incentivize qualityJamaica, United States
• Subsidies or vouchers (paid to school or family)Pakistan (Punjab), Mauritius, China (Yunnan Province)
• Private teacher training collegesKenya
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Some Examples (annex has details)
Latest in World Bank work on ECD
Global study
Measuring children’s cognitive and socioemotional development and the quality of preschool settings
We are measuring the system, NOT the child (no high stakes)
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Measuring early learning quality and outcomes (MELQO)
Interactive Audio Instruction (IAI)
• Scripted preschool lessons delivered via radio, phone or other methods
• Supports less experienced teachers
• Can be delivered via various technologies
• An affordable and scalable way to reach millions of children, in remote areas
• Could also be used to reach parents
Use adolescent skills training/TVET to deliver ECD
• Can we use TVET/Skills training programs to train preschool teachers and small business owners?Resources are already allocated
Countries face a huge challenge of “untrained” workforce for early childhood
• The Adolescent Girls Initiative in LiberiaMarket research to confirm viability
Increasing the return on investment
Community-based playgroups
An accompanying intervention to cash transfers
Programs in waiting rooms
Through radio/TV/mass media in the home
Through mobile phones
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Engaging parents
5 Takeaways
1. Early childhood is a critical time to invest
2. Early childhood yields high returns and will help you meet just about any goal
3. Equity
4. Quality
5. Get creative
Annex slides
Enrollment in preschool is increasing
Investments in ECD are growing dramatically, in response to increased demand
Pre-primary enrollment rates vary across countries in the region
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10
20
30
40
50
60
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80
90
100
Gross Pre-Primary Enrollment Across the Region (as of 2014)(source: EdStats)
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Engaging the non-state sector and
leveraging public-private partnerships
Measuring child development outcomes and
quality of early learning
Interactive audio instruction
Opportunity to use skills/TVET training
programs to build ECD workforce
Engaging parents in early stimulation and
early learning
Trends and Opportunities
Jamaica Early Childhood Commission: Standards promoting quality improvement for all service providers
• Functional agency with capacity and clear mandate: • ECC established in 2003 to ensure integrated and coordinated delivery of
early childhood programs and services. Responsible for inspecting all centers twice per year to ensure compliance with regulations, and has authority to withdraw permits
• Flexible, but clear, standards designed to promote improvement:• Institution standards established in 12 areas (staffing, finance, physical
environment, interactions, developmental programs, etc)• Possible ratings for each standard: needs improvement, minimally acceptable
or good practice• Some standards mandatory, some optional• Centers given a timeline and action plan for improvement
Punjab Province in Pakistan: Promoting education for children most in need• The Punjab Education Foundation (PEF) Foundation Assisted School
Program (FAS) provides subsidies to low-cost private schools• Schools receive a very low per-student subsidy, with no conditions on use
except that tuition must be waived for all students
• More than one million students have attended more than 2000 schools. Evaluations show increases in student learning
• PEF regulates quality of participating schools with high standards
Equity, access and quality achieved with minimal public sector effort and some finance
United States: Quality Rating Improvement System (QRIS)• A systemic approach to assess, improve, and communicate the level of quality
in ECE programs • Similar to rating systems for hotels and restaurants
• Uses quality ratings for programs that meet certain standards (stars system)
• A path of continuous quality improvement for providers from very basic levels of health and safety to the highest levels of quality
• It offers a series of opportunities• Increases quality of ECE services offered by providers• Increases parents’ understanding of and demand for high quality ECE services• Increases support to ECE providers in a coordinated manner (training, benchmarks,
financial rewards)
• For countries with a high number of informal, low-cost providers where quality is an issue, can offer a path to formality that is based on incentives and support
Mauritius: Using public finance for private sector provision• Early Childhood Care and Education Authority (gov’t agency) provides
a per capita grant of US$XX for every student age three and older attending school
• Grant goes directly to schools
• Nearly universal preschool coverage in Mauritius
Guanxi Province in China: Public finance and incentives for private provision• Municipality offers public land and school buildings and invites
private providers to open kindergartens
• Municipality provides annual subsidy of US$100 per student enrolled with bonus of US$130 for children from poor families
• These private kindergartens cannot charge more than public kindergartens
• Kindergartens are subject to government regulation but maintain administrative autonomy
Kenya: Teacher training delivered through private teacher training colleges• Growth in private teacher training colleges from 10 in 2000 to more
than 500 today
• Teachers train during holidays during a two-year period
• Incentives are aligned